JFK biographer Mr. Reeves says JFK caused the Vietnam war by authorizing the overthrow of Diem which occurred on Nov 1st 1963. 29-35 minutes on the below video:
This goes very much against the narrative James Douglas portrays in his book JFK And The Unspeakable in which he portrays JFK as a peace-loving hippie.
I wonder if JFK thought he could settle things in Vietnam using the overthrow in order to prevent Vietnam becoming an issue at the 1964 election. If so it was a very selfish thing to do as alot of people got killed in that war. Not of course did he intend that to happen, but he may have started the whole thing just to try and help him win the 1964 election.
It seems to me that JFK's support for the removal of Diem (and his brother) undercuts the allegation that he had decided by November to leave Vietnam, to withdraw US forces. If he made that decision then why deepen US involvement by supporting a coup? What was the purpose of a coup if the plan was to leave? As Reeves argues, supporting the Diem removal is akin to Colin Powell's observation about Iraq - "If you break it, you own it." If you remove the government, if you essentially "break it", then you have an obligation to put one back together. Or try to. Which is what LBJ tried to do afterwards.
Furthermore, if JFK had not made a decision to leave at that time then the argument that he was assassinated by "them" - the CIA, the Pentagon, the "National Security State" - because he was going to leave is completely undermined. He's not made a decision to leave so there's no reason to murder him because he was going "soft on communism". Maybe at a later date he was; but on November 22, 1963 he had not made that decision.
Robert Kennedy pointed out in 1964 the problem they faced with Diem and the aftermath of his removal, a problem that LBJ inherited:
"[T]he situation began to deteriorate in the spring of 1962, uh, spring of 1963. I think David Halberstam, from the New York Times' articles, had a strong effect on molding public opinion: the fact that the situation was unsatisfactory. Our problem was that thinking of Halberstam sort of as the Ma-- what Matthews [NY Times reporter Herbert Matthews] did in Cuba, that Batista [Fulgencio R. Batista] was not very satisfactory, but the important thing was to try to get somebody who could replace him and somebody who could keep, continue the war and keep the country united, and that was far more difficult. So that was what was of great concern to all of us during this period of time. Nobody liked Diem particularly, but how to get rid of him and get somebody that would continue the war, not split the country in two, and therefore lose not only the war but the country. That was the great problem.
Again, the key sentence: "...the important thing was to try to get somebody who could replace him and somebody who could keep, continue the war and keep the country united, and that was far more difficult. So that was what was of great concern to all of us during this period of time."
The Administration plan was to "try to get somebody who could replace him." That's not something you're going to do, it seems to me, if the decision was made to leave. Here RFK is admitting that the plan - at that time - was to try to "keep the country united" in a post-Diem regime. And the US would be staying there to do just that.